westcoastr
Chemical
- Jan 11, 2005
- 11
as a chemical eng, the only thing i know about soil is not to spill any toxic chemicals on it. i was hoping for some cross discipline help on my latest project.
I am putting in a gravity french drain around my house to dry out my crawl space (6"-1' of standing water during big rains). they are very popular in my neighborhood due to heavy water runoff from the surrounding hills. my house has a perimeter foundation (likely with a t-footing) with about 2-3' above the ground (believe 2-3' below grade also) and has concrete piers inside.
some drainge contractors locate their trenches 2-3' on outside of foundation and 12" below, while others put it right against the foundation. if you put it next to foundation, wouldn't you undermine the structural intergrity? especially if you dig 12" below it-are there not some type of lateral forces on the soil that could cause foundation shifts since you back fill with 3/4" rock? my pad and back yard are flat with about a 3' slope from front door to curb.
thanks
steven
I am putting in a gravity french drain around my house to dry out my crawl space (6"-1' of standing water during big rains). they are very popular in my neighborhood due to heavy water runoff from the surrounding hills. my house has a perimeter foundation (likely with a t-footing) with about 2-3' above the ground (believe 2-3' below grade also) and has concrete piers inside.
some drainge contractors locate their trenches 2-3' on outside of foundation and 12" below, while others put it right against the foundation. if you put it next to foundation, wouldn't you undermine the structural intergrity? especially if you dig 12" below it-are there not some type of lateral forces on the soil that could cause foundation shifts since you back fill with 3/4" rock? my pad and back yard are flat with about a 3' slope from front door to curb.
thanks
steven